“W
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hat’s behind door
number one?” That question and the
familiar voice emanating from the big console television in our den told me
that one of my favorite game shows was playing.
For years, “Let’s Make A Deal”, starring Monty Hall, dominated the air
waves. I loved to watch it as a kid,
just to see how people would react to pressure and the ever increasing
temptation to let go of a sure thing for something uncertain.
At times I found myself hoping they would make the deal,
especially if all they were holding was a box of chocolates while there before
them was a curtain or a door. Now that
door could have been hiding a car, or an old mule. The box could have contained chocolates or
several hundred dollars rolled up inside.
The point was to get the contestant to trade or keep what they had in
hand. Sometimes refusing to trade was a
good thing and sometimes not trading was the worst mistake any one could make.
In addition to
some of the zany deals Monty offered were the zany costumes of the
contestants. In order to get noticed,
people disguised themselves and masqueraded as fairy tale characters,
professionals, and all manner of odds and ends.
The more outlandish the disguise, the more ingenious the costume, and
the more clever the ruse, the more likely it was that a contestant would be
chosen to play the game. At that point,
they would embark on a series of deals leading up to the ultimate deal of the
evening in which three contestants were asked to give away their prizes in
hopes of getting something in return.
Sounds sort of
like the Christian life at times, doesn't it?
We find it so difficult to take God at his word and to trust that he has
our best interest at heart. When he is
dealing with us, when he wants to work in our lives, we have a hard time
letting go of our present circumstances in order to accept something else from
his hand. We aren't sure that what he
has is better than what
we currently hold
in our hand. We know in our heads that
God loves us, but in our hearts, we don’t really trust him. We believe it would be so much better if he
dealt with us on our terms instead of us dealing on his.
This last picture
is nowhere more evident than in the life of Abraham. Yes, Abraham! The great patriarch of faith found himself in
a situation where he tried to bargain with God.
Although God had promised Abraham a son, Sarah remained barren. She thought that she could have children
through her servant Hagar, and Abraham’s first son, Ishmael was born. But this was not God’s plan.
When Abraham was
99 years old, just one year before Isaac’s birth, he made the following
statement from Genesis 17:18 to God: "If only
Ishmael might live under your blessing!" In other words,
Abraham was saying, “Can we make a deal,
here? Can’t Ishmael fulfill your promise? Can’t it be some other way?” God’s answer was a resounding “No!” God’s promise was that Abraham would have a
son with Sarah and he would be the child of the promise. There would be no ifs, ands, buts, or deals
about it!
Can you identify with Abraham today? Do you find it so very hard to let go of what
you have in order to accept something else from God? If so, then I fully understand where you
are! But the fundamental truth is this,
God has plans for us, plans we can’t even imagine. The things he wants us to have are so far
superior to anything we possess that we would be foolish to miss out on an
opportunity such as this. But God will
not force us to accept anything from him.
Instead, he wants us to trust him, to come to the realization that he
only offers his best to us.
C
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an we make a deal
with God? Not hardly! And if we did, could we hold up our end of
the bargain? Think about it!!
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